Nagarkirtan: A Poignant Tale Of Queer Love And Identity
Nagarkirtan tugs at your heartstrings with its unique portrayal of queer love and leaves an impact that stays until long after youโve watched the film.ย
He is a man. By day, he delivers Chinese takeaway for an upmarket restaurant. By night, he weaves haunting melodies on his flute as an accompanist for a kirtan choir. His eyes gaze up, dreamily from beneath his curls as they look for her in the crowd. His heart comes crashing down when he canโt find her there. She is a woman. She claps and sings at traffic signals for a living, and wears cheap wigs and padded bras of myriad hues. Her red lips quiver as they long for his touch and her heart flutters when she sees him. One day, she wants to be everything he desires.
One day, sheโll get that sex reassignment surgery, and no longer need those padded bras. Sheโll even have her hair done the way he likesย
Set in the backdrop of the labyrinthine streets of North Kolkata and then the riverside town of Nabadwip, the Bengali film Nagarkirtan tells the heartbreaking tale of a trans woman (Riddhi Sen) and a cis man (Ritwick Chakraborty).
Directed by filmmaker Kaushik Ganguly, with stellar performances by the lead actors, Nagarkirtan tugs at your heartstrings with its unique portrayal of queer love and leaves an impact that stays until long after youโve watched the film. The main attraction of Nagarkirtan is actor Riddhi Sen. The National Award winner has genuinely outdone himself as the doe-eyed trans woman, Puti. You can feel Putiโs anxiety in Senโs furtive glances and shaky movements. Her pain resonates within you with every mournful gaze. With every sway of the hips and shrug of the shoulders, Sen beautifully captures Putiโs growth into a more self-assured, confident young woman. For two hours, one sees Riddhi Sen become Puti, rather than play her.
\ Nagarkirtanโs portrayal of societyโs internalised transphobia is sensitive and empathetic, without getting overly preachy or sentimental. In her cameo in the film, Indiaโs first transgender college principal, Manabi Bandyopadhyay, talks about how, despite a sex reassignment surgery, she continues to be barred from womenโs restrooms in her college. We get a glimpse into the daily living conditions of the trans community in urban India, marked by poverty, infighting, ostracism, and death. Through flashbacks, we learn about Putiโs transphobic family and her betrayal by a cis man, which led to her escape to Kolkata from her small town. With its commentary on societyโs deep-rooted cisnormativity, Nagarkirtan stands out as a rare film that dares to hold up a mirror to the naked realities of the socio-cultural context in which we live. With its commentary on societyโs deep-rooted cisnormativity, Nagarkirtan stands out as a rare film that dares to hold up a mirror to the naked realities of the socio-cultural context in which we live. feminisminindia.com The film, in addition to being a poignant love story and scathing social commentary, is an audio-visual treat.
The hypnotic background score by music director Prabuddha Banerjee is comprised entirely of kirtan songs that sing of Radhaโs yearning for Krishna, drawing parallels between Radha and Krishnaโs forbidden love and Putiโs clandestine relationship with her flute-playing lover. Cinematographer Sirsha Royโs camera meanders deftly through the sprawling city of Kolkata and the bustling neighborhoods of small-town Bengal, making different landscapes with all their sights and sounds come alive before our eyes. The scenes of physical intimacy between Puti and her lover deserve special mention in how they are artfully executed and never cross the line to being voyeuristic. All said and done, Nagarkirtan remains a one-of-a-kind film that brings conversations about gender and sexuality into the mainstream in a way that very few Indian films can claim to have done.
https://youtu.be/HMs6qCUAOY8
Hopefully, it will set a new precedent for representing queer relationships in Indian, especially Bengali cinema, with more movies deviating from heteronormative tropes. All said and done, Nagarkirtan remains a one-of-a-kind film that brings conversations about gender and sexuality into the mainstream in a way that very few Indian films can claim to have done. Hopefully, it will set a new precedent for representing queer relationships in Indian, especially Bengali cinema, with more movies deviating from heteronormative tropes. And hopefully, weโll get to see queer characters played by actual queer people. A bit of representation is the least that the community could ask for.ย
ps kindly see my post i could not submit the pics and links